Quote:
Originally Posted by DiapDealer
As one who has set up many a VPN (both from the client and server hardware sides) over the years, I'm still a bit confused (though I'm guessing your employer outsources their VPN needs). But then I don't have to get it. It's mostly irrelevant to the discussion.
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In many of the cases I am aware of, geolocation for the VPN shows the address of the point where you exit the VPN tunnel.
As an example, one company I do some work with is located in San Diego. When I connect to their VPN, my outbound to the Internet IP address belongs to their firewall at the location where the VPN tunnel terminates. My experience says that this is pretty standard unless split tunnelling is in use. Most of my experience has been that split tunneling is an avoidable security risk so avoid it unless absolutely necessary.